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Class ConflictShould parents meddle in their kids' classroom assignments?

Illustration by Mark Alan Stamaty. Click image to expand.It's back-to-school time, so I spent an early evening this week checking in with my friends about how their kids are doing after a couple of days in their new classes. One report got my fellow mothers and me scowling. At one school, a trio of bullies who had teamed up for a reign of minor terror in third grade last year were separated into three different classes for fourth grade—but then, on the second day of school, two of them were suddenly back together in one classroom. Clearly, one of the kid's parents had called and asked for a switch. And the school had caved in.

This seemed like exquisitely bad judgment on all sides. Teams of elementary-school teachers often meet for hours to hash out classroom assignments, taking great care over the combinations of kids they're building. Parents generally shouldn't try to influence which classes their children are in, and schools shouldn't give in to them when they do meddle. And certainly they shouldn't change class assignments after the fact. The policy of the Henry Barnard Laboratory School, based at Rhode Island College, strikes the proper discouraging tone:

Once faculty have made their student assignment recommendations to the Henry Barnard School administration, it is extremely difficult to make changes and maintain the goals of our placement procedure. Moving a student from one classroom assignment to another inevitably changes the environment of both classrooms. For that reason, administrative changes during the summer to classroom assignments will be extremely rare.

The hard truth about meddling is that when parents insist on a particular class assignment for their children, they can end up helping their own kid at the expense of someone else's. Class assignments are a zero-sum game: If your kid gets the teacher you like and escapes the mediocre or rotten alternative, another kid will be taking his place. For sure, parents talk themselves around this. They say it's their job to put their own kids' interests first. Or if they have an older child who has had a run-in with a teacher, they figure the family has already done its time and now deserves a break. Or they talk in code about how a teacher or a combination of classmates is just not the right fit for their child, though they're sure the setting will do everyone else's just fine.

I hope I never go down this road. It's the mommy/daddy version of backroom dealing. And it succumbs to the temptation to try to perfect every aspect of our children's lives. As my colleague Hanna Rosin put it about her oldest child's progress through elementary school, "Every year I have thought about lobbying for a particular teacher or to have a particular friend in her class. And every year I have resisted. I never once regretted that. She's had teachers who were, yes, slightly petty, and yellers, and also teachers who favor her. What happened to her? Nothing. She learned that—gasp!—adults are flawed, too."

Some schools don't see the hands-off parent as the virtuous parent, though. At Orangewood Elementary, a public school in Phoenix, Ariz., parents are invited to request a class assignment ahead of time, so long as they follow an established set of rules. The principal, Andree Charlson, explained to me that she asks parents first to sit in on the class they think they want, to see whether the teacher's instructional method really appeals to them rather than going on vague hearsay. She honors requests only when they jibe with her own and her teachers' sense of what makes for a good class mix. That includes balancing the number of boys and girls, including a range of ability levels, and not putting too many kids with behavioral problems in the same classroom.

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Emily Bazelon is a Slate senior editor and an editor of DoubleX.
Illustration by Mark Alan Stamaty.
COMMENTS

School should be looked at, in this context, like a job. In other words, adults take new jobs and have to form new relationships. We move cities and build new lives, we leave neighborhoods etc..etc..

Being in a different classroom shouldn't be any different. The kids can still hang out at lunch, after school and on weekends.

I think being able to deal with entirely new environments is just preparation for the many times it will happen as an adult.

-- therantguy
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click here)

As I think I've written before, we're all Darwinian animals. We don't want a fair or equal start in life for our own children, we want the best possible start so that they'll thrive, prosper and hopefully provide us with grandchildren, graduate degrees and other naches. That's particularly true for parents in the mandarin class, whose own position in life is based on their educational credentials, and who can only give their kids an education instead of a fortune as their portion in life. Of course anxious parents are going to say that they want the class assignment that they think is best for Johnny or Jennifer, and to hell with everyone else's kids. It's no different from the sports parents who demand that their little all-star bat cleanup. The question is whether the school system responds to that kind of pressure or defends its decisions made in what it thinks are the interest of the children as a group.

-- jack_cerf
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